> Tahquitz High School, which opened its doors just weeks ago in the
> small town of Hemet, California, cost taxpayers (not to mention
> veterans) like me and other hard-working U.S. citizens $60,000,000
> dollars to build. It's a brand-new, state-of-the-art facility boasting
> amenities that my own children, who attend an OLD, DECREPIT (but top-
> ranking) high school can only dream of.
>
> And the vast majority of Tahquitz High School's students, who enjoy
> cool, air-conditioned classrooms and gymnasiums while my own children
> swelter in classrooms and gymnasiums lacking air conditioning, are the
> anchor babies of illegal aliens.
>
> Amazingly, expecially since as a new school it only serves TWO GRADE
> LEVELS at the moment (freshmen and sophomores) this week the local
> newspaper reported that a SECOND, desperately needed police officer
> has had to be assigned to the school. The old, run-down, mostly-white
> high school that my own kids attend, which serves freshmen to seniors,
> has just one cop assigned to it. When I attended high school not far
> away, when virtually all students were U.S. citizens, no cops at all
> were needed to be assigned to the school.
>
> By the hundreds their illegal alien parents (sans drivers licenses
> or insurance, needless to say) drop their teenaged anchor babies off
> at the school every morning in time to receive the first of two free
> hot, multi-course meals (paid for by MY taxes). Across town, my own
> kids are forced to eat lukewarm ham sandwiches (guess who paid for the
> bread, etc?) which had been sitting in their lockers for hours, to
> later be washed down with a $1.25 bottles of Gatorade (yup, we pay
> cold cash for that, too) which the anchor babies are given for free. I
> figure that between the free breakfasts and lunches alone that their
> anchor babies (and thus, wallet-wise, they themselves) receive, the
> illegal alien parents are saving a good $12-$15 a day that I'm forced
> to shell out.
>
> Did I mention that my boss has warned me and a few other employees
> that if we bitch about a "slight" pay cut next year he'll be forced to
> "let us go and get some Mexicans to take our places"?
>
> Here's God's-honest-truth incident that I recently experienced at
> the local supermarket: As I waited while a non-English-speaking couple
> in front of me loaded one name-brand product after another onto the
> check-out conveyor belt, to be followed by pulling out seemingly
> hundreds of dollars in Food Stamps, it occurred to me that in my
> shopping cart, soon to be scanned and paid for (with genuine money
> that I earned, not Food Stamps), were a number of off-brand/"generic"
> items which the non-English-speaking illegal aliens in front of me
> (oddly, the woman appeared in her fifties, while the young man with
> her was about 30) were buying the more expensive name-brand versions
> of.
>
> So THIS is why I risked my life serving America in the U.S. Armed
> Forces? For the privilege, along with my fellow taxpayers, of paying
> $60 million for a brand-new new high school for violent, criminal
> anchor baby ingrates who, a mere weeks after it was opened, have
> turned it into a war zone? I dare not think about the grafitti problem
> the new $60 million facility I and my fellow citizens paid for surely
> has. Last summer two Mexicans walked up to a local white kid,
> demanded his iPod (which he turned over to them immediately) and then
> PUNCHED HIM IN HIS FACE ANYWAY? Don't believe it? By all means, call
> the Hemet PD! Many, many illegals have been apprehended for child
> molestation in this small town. Many other illegals suspected of
> abducting and raping American kids have also been sought but never
> captured. Realistically, about 80-90%% of the crime in this small town
> is being committed by illegals and their anchor babies. They are
> RAPING AND PLUNDERING not only my small town but America as a whole.
>
> WE CAN'T TAKE THIS ABUSE ANY MORE.
>
> SOME OF THE WORST TRAITORS TO THIS COUNTRY HAVE TO BE MADE EXAMPLES
> OF. ONLY THEN WILL WE, THE BACK-STABBED, OPPRESSED AND SOLD-OUT
> AMERICAN PEOPLE, FINALLY SEE THE CRAVEN POLITICIANS START TO TAKE US
> SERIOUSLY.
>
> This is from my local newspaper this past week and is still online at
> its website:
>
> Tahquitz High assigned second school resource officer
>
> By JAMIE AYALA
> The
Press-Enterprisehttp://www.pe.com
>
> HEMET - At the start of every school year, students push the limits to
> see what they can get away with, said Tahquitz High School Principal
> Sue Richardson.
>
> She said there is no tolerance for this on the new campus.
>
> Now in the fourth week of classes, the school has had more than 15
> suspensions for dress code violations and discipline issues. In light
> of three off-campus incidents involving a weapon, a racially- and gang-
> fueled argument and attempted theft, the Hemet Police Department
> temporarily reassigned a second school resource officer to Tahquitz
> this week.
>
> Hemet police Sgt. Mark Nipp said the regular school resource officer
> needed relief. During the first two weeks, the officer handled 65
> incidents on campus, Nipp said. They ranged from aggressive student
> behavior to dress code violations involving overly baggy pants and
> shirts that look like gang attire.
>
> "Ninth- and 10th-graders are historically getting into more trouble
> than other high school classes," Nipp said. "They're new to high
> school, still trying to figure out the system and don't see an end to
> their high school career yet."
>
> At Tahquitz, Nipp said there are no seniors to set examples.
>
> There are 932 freshmen and sophomores, many from Acacia and Santa Fe
> middle schools, enrolled at Tahquitz. Sixty-five transferred from the
> San Jacinto Unified School District, according to Richardson. School
> boundaries include an area north of Florida Avenue known for strong
> gang influences, Nipp said.
>
> Despite the diversity and great number of students in classes,
> Richardson says there have been no serious challenges on campus.
> Teachers were recently trained on gang-related paraphernalia and
> symbols. Law enforcement toured the campus before school started.
>
> Three teachers were added Monday to reduce class sizes.
>
> Ezekiel Gatson, 14, said the campus is a good place, especially
> because he gets along with everyone. He said he had not seen any
> conflicts among students.
>
> Erica Sanchez, 14, said she has noticed cliques forming. She said she
> is a little worried that they will one day cause some problems because
> campus supervisors are splitting them up.
>
> "Students realize the bar is set high on campus so they take their
> little warring groups off campus," Richardson said, referring to some
> of the off-campus incidents.
>
> One involved a 20-year-old woman who threatened some students with a
> weapon at a nearby park the first week of school, she said.
>
> Another started with a clash between students at school that continued
> on a school bus last week. A 19-year-old who was called by one of the
> students met the group at a bus stop with a stun gun.
>
> That same day, three students demanded a student's bike.